That LP gained enough local success to bring Sease to the attention of a record shop owner with music industry connections he, in turn, set up a series of discussions that led to Sease getting signed by Polygram. He recorded a few 45 r.p.m.’s in the ’70s-on Double M, on his own Early Records imprint-and then, in the mid-’80s, he used another of his singles, Ghetto Man, as the title track for a self-produced LP, also on Early Records. He eventually landed a steady gig at a Brooklyn club called the Casablanca. Like many scuffling vocalists, he often worked without a band, performing to pre-recorded backing tracks, although he also remembered fronting an aggregation called the Soul Keys. He formed a Temptations-style vocal group with his brothers Charlie and Harold (according to some accounts, three of his brothers may have been involved), but he soon broke free and embarked on a solo career. All the while he kept an eye out for other opportunities. He sang and played guitar with the Mighty Gospel Crowns and a Brooklyn-based group called the Gospel Knights, with whom he recorded a few sides in the mid-’60s. Once in the big city, he again found himself singing gospel.
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